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The Trouble With 'X'
From God In
the Dock by C S Lewis
I suppose I may assume that seven
out of ten of those who read these lines are in some kind of
difficulty about some other human being. Either at work or at
home, either the people who employ you or those whom you employ,
either those who share your house or those whose house you share,
either your in-laws or parents or children, your wife or your
husband, are making life harder for you than it need be even
in these days. It is to be hoped that we do not often mention
these difficulties (especially the domestic ones) to outsiders.
But sometimes we do. An outside friend asks us why we are looking
so glum; and the truth comes out.
On such occasions the outside friend
usually says, 'But why don't you tell them? Why don't you go
to your wife (or husband, or father, or daughter, or boss, or
landlady, or lodger) and have it all out? People are usually
reasonable. All you've got to do is to make them see things in
the right light. Explain it to them in a reasonable, quiet, friendly
way' And we, whatever we say outwardly, think sadly to ourselves,
'He doesn't know "X".' We do. We know how utterly hopeless
it is to make 'X' see reason. Either we've tried it over and
over again - tried it till we are sick of trying it - or else
we've never tried it because we saw from the beginning how useless
it would be. We know that if we attempt to 'have it all out with
"X" ' there will either be a 'scene', or else 'X' will
stare at us in blank amazement and say 'I don't know what on
earth you're talking about'; or else (which is perhaps worst
of all) 'X will quite agree with us and promise to turn over
a new leaf and put everything on a new footing - and then, twenty-four
hours later, will be exactly the same as 'X' has always been.
You know, in fact, that any attempt
to talk things over with 'X' will shipwreck on the old, fatal
flaw in 'X's' character. And you see, looking back, how all the
plans you have ever made always have shipwrecked on that fatal
flaw - on 'X's' incurable jealousy, or laziness, or touchiness,
or muddle-headedness, or bossiness, or ill temper, or changeableness.
Up to a certain age you have perhaps had the illusion that some
external stroke of good fortune - an improvement in health, a
rise of salary, the end of the war - would solve your difficulty.
But you know better now. The war is over, and you realize that
even if the other things happened, 'X' would still be 'X', and
you would still be up against the same old problem. Even if you
became a millionaire, your husband would still be a bully, or
your wife would still nag or your son would still drink, or you'd
still have to have your mother-in-law to live with you.
It is a great step forward to realize
that this is so; to face the fact that even if all external things
went right, real happiness would still depend on the character
of the people you have to live with - and that you can't alter
their characters. And now comes the point. When you have seen
this you have, for the first time, had a glimpse of what it must
be like for God. For, of course, this is (in one way) just what
God Himself is up against. He has provided a rich, beautiful
world for people to live in. He has given them intelligence to
show them how it can be used, and conscience to show them how
it ought to be used. He has contrived that the things they need
for their biological life (food, drink, rest, sleep, exercise)
should be positively delightful to them. And, having done all
this, He then sees all His plans spoiled - just as our little
plans are spoiled - by the crookedness of the people themselves.
All the things He has given them to be happy with they turn into
occasions for quarrelling and jealousy, and excess and hoarding,
and tomfoolery.
You may say it is very different
for God because He could, if He pleased, alter people's characters,
and we can't. But this difference doesn't go quite as deep as
we may at first think. God has made it a rule for Himself that
He won't alter people's character by force. He can and will alter
them - but only if the people will let Him. In that way He has
really and truly limited His power. Sometimes we wonder why He
has done so, or even wish that He hadn't. But apparently He thinks
it worth doing. He would rather have a world of free beings,
with all its risks, than a world of people who did right like
machines because they couldn't do anything else. The more we
succeed in imagining what a world of perfect automatic beings
would be like, the more, I think, we shall see His wisdom.
I said that when we see how all
our plans shipwreck on the characters of the people we have to
deal with, we are 'in one way' seeing what it must be like for
God. But only in one way. There are two respects in which God's
view must be very different from ours. In the first place, He
sees (like you) how all the people in your home or your job are
in various degrees awkward or difficult; but when He looks into
that home or factory or office He sees one more person of the
same kind - the one you never do see. I mean, of course, yourself.
That is the next great step in wisdom - to realize that you also
are just that sort of person. You also have a fatal flaw in your
character. All the hopes and plans of others have again and again
shipwrecked on your character just as your hopes and plans have
shipwrecked on theirs.
It is no good passing this over
with some vague, general · admission such as 'Of course,
I know I have my faults.' It is important to realize that there
is some really fatal flaw in you: something which gives the others
just that same feeling of despair which their flaws give you.
And it is almost certainly something you don't know about - like
what the advertisements call 'halitosis', which everyone notices
except the person who has it. But why, you ask, don't the others
tell me? Believe me, they have tried to tell you over and over
again, and you just couldn't 'take it'. Perhaps a good deal of
what you call their 'nagging' or 'bad temper' or 'queerness'
are just their attempts to make you see the truth. And even the
faults you do know you don't know fully. You say, 'I admit I
lost my temper last night'; but the others know that you're always
doing it, that you are a bad-tempered person. You say, 'I admit
I drank too much last Saturday'; but everyone else knows that
you are a habitual drunkard.
That is one way in which God's
view must differ from mine. He sees all the characters: I see
all except my own. But the second difference is this. He loves
the people in spite of their faults. He goes on loving. He does
not let go. Don't say, 'It's all very well for Him; He hasn't
got to live with them.' He has. He is inside them as well as
outside them. He is with them far more intimately and closely
and incessantly than we can ever be. Every vile thought within
their minds (and ours), every moment of spite, envy, arrogance,
greed and self-conceit comes right up against His patient and
longing love, and grieves His spirit more than it grieves ours.
The more we can imitate God in
both these respects, the more progress we shall make. We must
love 'X' more; and we must learn to see ourselves as a person
of exactly the same kind. Some people say it is morbid to be
always thinking of one's own faults. That would be all very well
if most of us could stop thinking of our own without soon beginning
to think about those of other people. For unfortunately we enjoy
thinking about other people's faults: and in the proper sense
of the word 'morbid', that is the most morbid pleasure in the
world.
We don't like rationing which is
imposed upon us, but I suggest one form of rationing which we
ought to impose on ourselves. Abstain from all thinking about
other people's faults, unless your duties as a teacher or parent
make it necessary to think about them. Whenever the thoughts
come unnecessarily into one's mind, why not simply shove them
away? And think of one's own faults instead? For there, with
God's help, one can do something. Of all the awkward people in
your house or job there is only one whom you can improve very
much. That is the practical end at which to begin. And really,
we'd better. The job has to be tackled some day: and every day
we put it off will make it harder to begin.
What, after all, is the alternative?
You see clearly enough that nothing, not even God with all His
power, can make 'X' really happy as long as 'X' remains envious,
self-centred, and spiteful. Be sure there is something inside
you which, unless it is altered, will put it out of God's power
to prevent your being eternally miserable. While that something
remains there can be no Heaven for you, just as there can be
no sweet smells for a man with a cold in the nose, and no music
for a man who is deaf. It's not a question of God 'sending' us
to Hell. In each of us there is something growing up which will
of itself be Hell unless it is nipped in the bud. The matter
is serious: let us put ourselves in His hands at once - this
very day, this hour.
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